<p>Are we allowed to comment on the paper yet?
If so,there’s this math question Im itching to discuss.
I guess,I’ll wait 8 more hours or something.</p>
<p>Perfectpixie, sadly no, people in America still haven’t taken the test :D</p>
<p>Okay then.How was yours?(I guess we can discuss that right?)
You’re from Thailand I see.You guys have beautiful glass work and cute hairbands right?lol.Im from India bdw,and people from thailand also participate in the Annual World Trade fair here,that’s where I got to know this.</p>
<p>Really? I guess the people at the Annual Word Trade Fair is representing quite a small part of Thai society cause I’ve never seen cute hairbands around here xD</p>
<p>Imported hair stuff from Thailand and Malaysia are quite a rage here
Of course,Thailand is known for a lot more than just hairbands,lol.</p>
<p>Haha this hairband thing is so random. Distracted me from how upset I was about SATs.</p>
<p>Was the SC similar to direct hits?</p>
<p>Math was hard.</p>
<p>@pi etc: The curve is not determined before the test is administered (although the difficulty of each question independently is known beforehand). The web site linked states this as well, but for “official” information about this, see [this</a> College Board white paper](<a href=“http://professionals.collegeboard.com/profdownload/pdf/rn14_11427.pdf]this”>http://professionals.collegeboard.com/profdownload/pdf/rn14_11427.pdf) for the technical information about the curve / equating / standardization of the SAT.</p>
<p>See also [thread=760312]this thread[/thread] for a long but example-filled discussion of the curve.</p>
<p>^OK, that’s what I thought. I really couldn’t imagine how CB could judge the difficulty of the test without raw scores.</p>